{{Short description|Study of the names of human beings}} {{Expand language|topic=Linguistics|langcode=es|otherarticle=Antroponimia|date=October 2019}} {{linguistics}} '''Anthroponymy''' (also '''anthroponymics''' or '''anthroponomastics''', from Ancient Greek ἄνθρωπος ''anthrōpos'', 'human', and ὄνομα ''onoma'', 'name') is the study of ''anthroponyms'', the proper names of human beings, both individual and collective.{{sfn|Room|1996|p=8}} Anthroponymy is a branch of onomastics.
Researchers in the field of anthroponymy are called ''anthroponymists''. Since the study of anthroponyms is relevant for several other disciplines within social sciences and humanities, experts from those disciplines engage in anthroponymic studies, including researchers from the fields of anthropology,{{sfn|Bruck|Bodenhorn|2009|p=}} history,{{sfn|Ziolkowska|2011|p=383–398}} human geography,{{sfn|Bourin|Martínez Sopena|2010|p=}} sociology, prosopography,{{sfn|Fossier|2010|p=34}} and genealogy.
Anthroponymists follow certain principles, rules and criteria when researching anthroponyms. The methods used for research are divided into two major categories: the collecting of anthroponymic information and the analysis and interpretation of anthroponyms. The collection of anthroponymic information includes: inscriptions, documents, onomastics-tax records, dictionaries, phone books, monographs, and websites, which are used afterward for mapping purposes. The analysis and interpretation of anthroponyms take into account the processing of the collection of the information gathered, which consists of linguistic analysis, comparative-historical method, geographical method, and statistical method.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Boamfa|first=Ionel|date=2017|title=RESEARCH METHODOLOGY|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/334498772|journal=4th International Multidisciplinary Scientific Conferences on Social Sciences & Arts SGEM 2017|pages={{!}}page=8|via=Research gate}}</ref>
==Anthroponymy of individual and family names== [[File:Cartouches of Ramesses III.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Name of pharaoh Ramesses III, written in hieroglyphs]] Anthroponymy of individual and family names, and their mutual correlations, includes the study of: {{columns-list|colwidth=18em| * Personal names * Given names * Surnames * Nicknames * Pseudonyms * Mononyms * Matronyms * Patronyms * Eponyms * Teknonyms }}
Anthroponyms of individuals can also be classified according to gender. Names of human males are called ''andronyms'' (from Ancient Greek ἀνήρ / man, and ὄνομα / name),{{sfn|Room|1996|p=6}} while names of human females are called ''gynonyms'' (from Ancient Greek γυνή / woman, and ὄνομα / name).{{sfn|Barolini|2005|p=91, 98}}
==Anthroponymy of group and population names== Anthroponymy of group and population names includes the study of demonyms (names of localized populations),{{sfn|Roberts|2017|p=205-220}} ethnonyms (names of ethnic groups),{{sfn|Room|1996|p=38-39}} as well as tribal names and clan names.
== Anthroponymy and culture == Anthroponymy is a socio-cultural tool that can be used to find out about an individual's culture. Through the name of a person, their nationality, as well as their history, can be traced. Anthroponyms have both a national and cultural significance as they guarantee the preservation of linguistics, cultural, and historical information.{{citation needed|date=November 2021}}
==Related terms and processes== There are several specific terms and processes related to anthroponymy, like: * ''anthroponymization'', a process when an anthroponym is formed from an apellative, like when a surname is created from the name of ones occupation, thus forming an occupational surname. Such surnames are common in most languages, including English: ''Smith'' (from smith), ''Miller'' (from miller), ''Thatcher'' (from thatcher), ''Shepherd'' (from shepherd), or ''Potter'' (from potter).{{sfn|Room|1996|p=9}} * ''deanthroponymization'', a process when an anthroponym becomes an apellative, like when the surname of the inventor Louis Braille was used to create a name for the writing system for visually impaired persons (braille).{{sfn|Room|1996|p=28}} * ''transonymization'' of anthroponyms into toponyms, a process when a human proper name is used to form a toponym (proper name of a locality; place name), thus creating an ''anthropotoponym'', like when the name of Alexander the Great was used to create several ''astionyms'' (city names), including for the newly created city of Alexandria in ancient Hellenistic Egypt, or when the surname of Christopher Columbus was used to create several ''choronyms'' (region names), including names for the South American country of Colombia, and the Canadian province of British Columbia.{{sfn|Room|1996|p=30}} * ''transonymization'' of toponyms into anthroponyms, a process when toponyms (place names) are used to form human names (anthroponyms), thus creating various ''topoanthroponyms''.<ref>[https://ulir.ul.ie/bitstream/handle/10344/3450/Lefman-2013-InternationalisationOfPeopleNames.pdf Gary Lefman (2013): Internationalisation of People Names]</ref> Many surnames are created in this way, and they are known as toponymic surnames. Most demonyms (names for localized populations) are ''topoanthroponyms'' by formation, since they are usually created from toponyms, and also some ethnonyms are ''topoanthroponyms'' too (those that are formed from toponyms, and thus referred to as ''topoethnonyms'').{{sfn|Reis|2013|p=58–61}} For example, geographic designations for the region of ''Black Mountain'' (Montenegro) and frontier region of ''Ukraina'' (Ukraine) were used to create not only demonyms for general populations for those regions, but also ethnonyms for modern ethnic Montenegrins and ethnic Ukrainians.{{sfn|Danver|2015|p=348-349, 384-387}}
==See also== {{wiktionary}} {{columns-list|colwidth=25em| * Birth name * Middle name * Legal name * Double surname * Toponymic surname * Ancient Greek personal names * Bilingual tautological anthroponyms * Endonym and exonym * Nominative determinism * Posthumous name * Necronym * Suffix ''onym'' }}
==References== {{reflist}}
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{{Personal names}} {{Authority control}}
Category:Onomastics Category:Human names Category:Anthropology